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RECRUITINGINTERVENTIONAL

Project VOICES: Vocal Optimization in Children Elevating the Spectrum

Important: This information is not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.

About This Trial

Thirty percent of children with autism barely talk or do not talk at all despite years of intervention. This study aims to address this important and long-standing challenge by developing a novel intervention to increase the quantity and quality of vocalizations (i.e., sounds children make before words) and expressive language in young children with autism (aged 2 to 5 years) with minimal verbal skills. The intervention includes contingent responses to the child's vocalizations and vocal elicitation strategies. We also collect social validity information from parents about how they perceive the novel intervention.

Who May Be Eligible (Plain English)

Child participants - Inclusion criteria - Diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder - Aged 2 to 5 years old - Use no more than 20 words (spoken, signed, or via augmentative and alternative communication) per parent report - Use of \< 5 different words during a 15-min communication sample - Use of at least one consonant (observed or reported) - Primary language of English - Exclusion criteria - Uncorrected visual or hearing impairment - Evidence of severe motor impairment Caregiver participants • Inclusion criteria - Have a child enrolled in the study (One caregiver per child participant is enrolled.) - Sufficient English skills to complete surveys Always talk to your doctor about whether this trial is right for you.

Original Eligibility Criteria

View original clinical language
Child participants * Inclusion criteria * Diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder * Aged 2 to 5 years old * Use no more than 20 words (spoken, signed, or via augmentative and alternative communication) per parent report * Use of \< 5 different words during a 15-min communication sample * Use of at least one consonant (observed or reported) * Primary language of English * Exclusion criteria * Uncorrected visual or hearing impairment * Evidence of severe motor impairment Caregiver participants • Inclusion criteria * Have a child enrolled in the study (One caregiver per child participant is enrolled.) * Sufficient English skills to complete surveys

Treatments Being Tested

BEHAVIORAL

Contingent responses

The adult systematically responds to more complex child vocalizations with more complex responses. When the child first vocalizes, the adult imitates that vocalization. The child's response determines the next adult response. If the child produces a vocalization within 3 seconds, the adult imitates the child, provides a linguistic map (i.e., puts the apparent meaning into words), and complies nonverbally with the child's apparent intent (e.g., giving item or action). If the child does not produce another vocalization within 3 seconds, the adult remains quiet until the child vocalizes again.

BEHAVIORAL

Contingent responses plus vocal elicitation strategies

The adult follows the contingent responses condition protocol with the addition of using vocal toys (e.g., echo tubes, microphones that distort voices, and microphones that amplify voices) within exciting turn-taking activities/routines (e.g., blowing bubbles, balloons, and whoopee cushions). The vocal elicitation strategies emphasize the need to help children vocalize to initiate child-adult interactions. These strategies may be especially important for children who vocalize infrequently to benefit from other intervention aspects and enhance their spoken language skills. The vocal elicitation strategies are to be used when needed, rather than being obligatory for every adult-child interaction. If the child vocalizes without a vocal elicitation prompt, the adult still responds to the vocalization

BEHAVIORAL

Non-contingent control

The adult provides non-contingent vocal responses based on audio recordings from prior contingent responses condition sessions transmitted via a wireless earpiece. Recordings from these yoked sessions control for number and type of adult vocalizations and minimize the degree of contingency between adult and child vocalizations in this condition.

Locations (1)

Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, Tennessee, United States